Friday, February 17, 2012

new tabs, buttons, and a pretty barn.

There's a new tab up there. You can now access my Etsy store from there. I have added buttons on that page for the different shop sections. The buttons are also on the right side of the blog too. Go ahead click them and take a look around, I dare you! As always I love creating custom orders so if you see something you like but it's just not quite right let me know and together we can create something just for you!

And because I can't have a post without a picture and because all my thoughts lately have all been with my ENTIRE family on both my mom's and dad's side up in Vermont, here is a red barn that reminds me of Vermont's endless countryside.




It's hard losing people, especially when they are family.



Spend time with your loved ones this weekend and call a family member who you don't get to see often enough due to distance, or anything else. You never know when fate won't let you anymore.

~Meg

Thursday, February 16, 2012

remembering how little your kids were... in the future.

After much debate and persuasion from hubby I've decided to create a few more of these growth rulers and list them in the shop. I first posted about the one I created for our home here.





I think they are the perfect gift to families of little ones or even first time expectant parents who are anticipating watching their new little one grow. Each one is stained in walnut and hand painted. We love ours not only for the look but also so we can track how big our kids gets, or how little they once were, and since we move around a lot it is the perfect solution for us instead of leaving measurements behind on walls and moldings of places we once lived.

There is already hardware attached to the back of each one so it's ready for hanging once it arrives!

Go here to see them and shop.

~Meg

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Are you a Beatrix Potter fan?

New in the shop!

Beatrix Potter story book frames, made using a page from one of his vintage story books.




One would be perfect as a baby shower gift or to put out for Easter decor. You can find them here.

~Meg

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

let's talk lighting.

My sister and her husband are in the "picking out all the fixtures and details" stage of their house building so I've been looking at a lot of lights lately to help them decide what would be best for them. Here are some that caught my eye:

Source: lowes.com via Meg on Pinterest



This one is a little more traditional but would work well with the design plan throughout the house.

Source: lowes.com via Meg on Pinterest



Love the unique shade shape on this one:



Love the mix of the 2 finishes on this one.



I can picture this light hanging in a kitchen with a wall of windows and a view of a green garden:



Of course the school house pendant is a classic and always at the top of my list:



I think this would look great hanging as a pair in a long hallway.



This would make a great entryway light:


As well as this, and also in a hallway again hanging as a pair:



A little more modern but it has a classic style to it:


This one would be fun hanging in an entry:



I've been obsessed with the Movarian light for a long time, I think since I first spotted them in a PB catalog. I found one at a garage sale so I purchased it, before I could hang it, it was crushed by hubby while moving things around in the garage.



Another classic and elegant looking light for an entry:

Source: homedepot.com via Meg on Pinterest



And I love this for a bathroom vanity.




You can find their original sources below each light and on my Pinterest page. I'll keep you updated with what we pick.

~Meg

*I would love to help you create a home that you love. Email me at WinderandMain@gmail.com or visit the Decorating Services tab above.

Monday, February 6, 2012

guest room re-do sneak peak.

I got the urge to change up the guest room nook. When we moved into this house I put the same pillows that were on the bed at the last house but didn't really finish it yet. I searched through my fabric stash and found some coordinating fabrics. Here's a sneak peak. I'm hoping I'll be able to show you a full reveal by the end of the week.

The white and blue fabric is Annie Selke and the floral is a Nautica fabric by Robert Allen, purchased years ago. I guess I'm going blue... stay tuned!

~Meg

Thursday, February 2, 2012

chevron art work.

When I showed you my drop leaf table chalkpaint project I mentioned that I needed some kind of artwork on the wall. After seeing this piece in this home I decided that would be the perfect solution to the bald spot I had going on behind the table and lamp.

Here's how I did it:

You'll need a canvas the size you wish your art to be {mine is 16x20 and wrapped, picked up at a craft store}

Paint in your color choice, {I mixed some light grey with white to make it even lighter}

a pen

paintbrush

some cardboard the same width of your canvas

a razor blade

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To make life easier I created a stencil template for my chevron stripes. I began by deciding how spaced out I wanted my "peaks" to be. I made it easy and went for 4 of them and marked on the cardboard edge 4 marks spaced 4" apart. Does that make sense? {measure from the perimeter of your cardboard 4", mark, then another 4",mark, and so on until I had no more room left}.


Then I decided I wanted my stripes to be 3" in width. So I measured 3" down from the top on both sides and made a reference line. Then measured 3" down from both the marks I had first made {the peaks}, and every 2 inches from those first marks. Then I used a straight edge and connected my marks to make a zigzag. I began the second zig zag line {to create the full chevron stripe}, at the same line as my "bottom peak", {hence why we measured 3" down from the peak earlier}. Am I confusing you yet? Here's what it looked like after everything was measured, marked, and connected. Just make sure you keep the same measurements throughout if you want it perfectly even.

Then use a razor blade and cut your template out. It should fit just right onto your canvas.

Now you can begin tracing the stripe onto your canvas. Because I only measured for the chevron to be equal with my canvas width ways, I had to raise my "peaks" off the edge of the canvas to begin my first stripe so that the bottom and top could be even looking, {you'll see in the next picture}. After you trace one stripe. Measure 3 inches down from a top peak and make a mark. That is where you will place your stencil to trace the next stripe.

Here is what it looked like after it was all traced out. See how my top and bottom "run off" the canvas? If I had began the top chevron evenly with the perimeter it would have left the bottom uneven and running off majorly by itself. I believe after measuring it I found that starting my peak 2 1/2" off of the canvas would leave me with the top and bottom symmetrical.


Once I decided what color I would paint it {it began green but I couldn't get the right green I had in mind so decided to go with grey instead}, this is what it looks like.








And since everything was picked up and put away I thought I take a picture and show you the area I'm looking to make a botanical collage... See how boring it is and needs something like yesterday!

I'll share more about the living room at a later date but thought I'd show you the area that's been bugging me most, it's almost there though!

~Meg

{linked to some of these parties below}


UndertheTableandDreaming freckled laundry Funky Junk's Sat Nite Special Join  us Saturdays at tatertotsandjello.com for the weekend wrap up     party! Chic on a Shoestring Decorating
Furniture Feature Fridays Visit thecsiproject.com giveaways Transformation Thursday My Uncommon Slice of Suburbia
The Lettered Cottage
{Primp}

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